Please visit SoulofHealing.org, non profit, 501(c)(3) for our patient assistance programs. If you have been denied by insurance or you do not have insurance please visit SunnyPharma.info to get generic Sovaldi($695), Harvoni($1495), Epclusa($2195) and Daklinza($695). All prices are based upon 12 weeks and 84 tablets. Verified by American doctors and nurses.
Sunday, July 10, 2016
Medi-Cal To Spend Nearly $1 Billion On Hepatitis C Drugs Next Year
High prices for new hepatitis C drugs have forced California health
officials to budget nearly $1 billion next year in additional payments
for managed care plans to treat Medi-Cal patients infected with the
disease.
The health insurance industry calls the arrangement a “patch on the problem” of unsustainable drug pricing.
“These drugs are priced too high,” said Charles Bacchi, President and
CEO of the California Association of Health Plans. “There has to be a
better way to deal with this.”
The money will be used to treat about 14,300 hepatitis C patients on
Medi-Cal, the state’s Medicaid program. They are enrolled in managed
care programs run by commercial insurers, which are paid a fixed sum to
care for groups of patients. The extra funds will pay for expensive
hepatitis C drugs such as Sovaldi and Harvoni. About 30 percent of that
money will come from the state budget, with federal dollars paying for
the rest.
The companies that make these drugs, which can cure the infectious
viral liver disease, have come under fire in recent years for their high
prices. Sovaldi has been priced at about $84,000 for a 12-week course
of treatment, but a newer regimen has been priced at $54,000.
The news of next year’s spiraling Medi-Cal drug costs will likely
come up at a July 28 hearing in the state’s Assembly Health Committee on
controversial legislation that would require drug makers to be more transparent about price increases.
The bill would oblige manufacturers to disclose drug price increases
of 10 percent or more, as well as the introduction of drugs costing more
than $10,000 per year or course of treatment. It would also require
health insurers to report how much of each premium dollar is spent on
prescription drugs.
Overall spending on the hepatitis C treatments is rising because more
patients are taking the drug — almost quadruple the number treated less
than two years ago, according to state officials.
The rising number of users is likely due to “a growing awareness of
the new drugs that are out there for the treatment,” said Lindy
Harrington, deputy director of health care financing with the California
Department of Health Care Services.
Despite the state’s soaring expense, the overall price per patient
appears to be declining. Joel Hay, pharmaceutical economist at the
University of Southern California, said the decreased costs are a result
of new market competition from hepatitis C treatments marketed by
AbbVie and Merck.
Medi-Cal health plans received an average of $106, 926 per hepatitis C
patient during the first 16 months of the funding arrangement, which
started in 2014. Next fiscal year, insurers will get only $65,286 per
person.
Last summer, Medi-Cal eased restrictions on who can receive the
drugs. Patients with less advanced liver disease can now get them, as
well as active IV drug users and women who plan to get pregnant. But
Harrington said the new medical criteria for coverage are not
necessarily what’s behind the increased use.
Although pricey, Hay said the value of the new generation of hepatitis C drugs is well worth the cost.
“These are amazing drugs,” Hay said. “How many drugs out there cure a disease?”
There are no cures for diseases such as HIV, diabetes, muscular
dystrophy or asthma, he noted. But companies that increase the prices of
long-standing generic drugs or command high prices for treatments that
“do very little good” should come under scrutiny, he said.
“If we don’t reward people to cure the disease, we’re not going to
get cures for the disease,” Hay said. “What we shouldn’t be doing is
rewarding people for a new cancer treatment that adds three weeks of
life.”
The Pharmaceutical Researchers and Manufacturers of America (PhRMA)
said in a written statement that the introduction of new drug treatments
on the market drives prices down through competition. The trade
association also noted that Medicaid programs get some of the lowest
negotiated prices from manufacturers.
But the cost to Medi-Cal for treating hepatitis C next year is a
serious concern to state Senator Ed Hernandez (D-West Covina), the
chairman of the Senate Health Committee.
”Every [company] should have a right to make a profit, but not an
excessive profit to the extent that it costs taxpayers not only in tax
dollars but also in premium dollars,” said Hernandez, who authored the
drug price transparency bill.
Medi-Cal administrators say supplemental payments to health plans for
hepatitis C drugs are expected to continue in the coming years. It
remains difficult to tell whether the treatments will result in future
savings.
“An expensive drug that cures a disease may prevent even higher costs
down the road,” said Tony Cava, public information officer for DHCS.
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